/m/obits

Reader Comments and Retorts

Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.

His 1971 (12 RBI in 618 PA) is legendary. It's too bad that was the year before the season where Nate Colbert had 111 of the Padres' 452 RBI. And a season after Preston Gomez pulled Clay Kirby after 8 innings of no-hit pitching, on a day when the Padres were 29 games out of first place. Those three achievements deserved to be together.

Damned sorry to hear it. For no apparent reason (I guess I liked his name; at age 11 or 12, such things seem to carry a fair amount of weight) he was one of my favorite players when I was a kid, & when I sent him an SASE (or maybe it was just an SAS index card) asking for his autograph he complied.

I'd just get depressed if I were to look up how many of the then-current players I did that with are now dead, though Elrod Hendricks & Bill Robinson come immediately to mind. (And, of course, Harmon Killebrew. Dammit!)

Man, another suicide. Flanagan, Irabu, Freel, and Hernandez, all in the last two years.

There is no logic behind this thought, but I got a little scared by this. Enzo was 5'8", 155 lb. (bbref) and got to the bigs from Venezuela. He must have had courage and worked very hard to get where he got. Can anyone translate the Spanish article in the Venezuelan site? My condolences to the Hernandez family and friends.

Fun fact: Enzo had just 12 RBI in 1971, the fewest ever for a player that qualified for a batting title (post-deadball). Bob Barton, meanwhile, scored just 23 runs in 413 PA; take away his 5 HR, then Barton scored just 18 times without driving himself in. Six, or half, of Enzo's RBI drove in Barton.

In all, the 1971 Padres scored just 486 runs, or 3.02 per game (they played only 161 games) in a league that averaged 3.91 RPG. What if this team played three years earlier, in an even more arid offensive environment?

Well...the '68 NL averaged 3.43 (ouch) RPG. Do the math: the theoretical '68 Padres would've scored just 426 runs, or 2.64 runs per game. For a team with this offense to win the pennant (.600 WPCT), they would need to hold opponents to (if my math is right) 2.16 RPG. (For comparison, the pennant-winning Cardinals allowed 2.91.) This works out to a team ERA+ of (roughly) 158. Wow.

Could the Padres -- or any team -- even assemble such a pitching staff? You'd have to save about 200 runs vs. league average to make it work. Your 1968 MLB leaders in Adjusted Pitching Runs:

According to the Spanish language article, Hernandez suffered from depression and had received treatment for it. The article also indicates that he suffered a "relapse" (if that's the right word) of depression in December.

Depression can often hit later in life. The NIMH estimates the average age of onset at 32 years old. A friend (well, ex-friend really, lost touch for lots of reasons long ago) got whammied around 35-40 and it broke up his family. Possibly some self-medicating through alcohol and pot (neither recommended!) Looking back there were probably some hints -- the occasional overly-moody swing -- but he generally seemed a pretty happy, well-adjusted guy and his wife and kids adored him until everything kinda went to ####.